25
The Concept of the Renaissance Federico Chabod

The Concept of the Renaissance

  • Upload
    nyx

  • View
    21

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

The Concept of the Renaissance. Federico Chabod. The Traditional Concept. The problem of Continuity Fustel de Coulanges and his theory on the Barbarian invaders ( tabula rasa ) - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Citation preview

  • The Concept of the Renaissance Federico Chabod

  • The Traditional Concept The problem of ContinuityFustel de Coulanges and his theory on the Barbarian invaders (tabula rasa)The theory of continuity against the theory of things as they have occurred (effects and dangers of each theory in itself) p. 151The traditional concepts: Middle Ages and RenaissanceThe praesens tempus and media aetas according to Italians of the XIV and XV (Boccaccio, C. Salutati, L. Valla, L. Bruni)

  • As the city of Rome perished at the hands of the perverse and tyrannical emperors, so did Latin studies and literature undergo similar ruin and diminution . . . And Italy was invaded by the Goths and Longobards, barbarous, uncouth people, who practically extinguished all knowledge of literature. Leonardo Bruni

    All statues and paintings were smashed and torn . . . And thus were destroyed not only statues and paintings, but the books and commentaries and handbooks and rules on which men relied for their training in this great and excellent and gentle art Lorenzo Ghiberti

  • Vasari : criticism of the Christians but not of the faith. His is an aesthetic criticismVoltaire: antipathy for Catholicism : it is the guilt of religion, responsible for medieval obscurantism (furor against the papacys power during the Middle Ages - spirit of the Reformation) Voltaire echoes Ghibertis and Vasaris opinions about the fall of the Roman empire, the advent of Christianity and the barbarism of the northern invaders These opinions are amplified by modern historians: Michelet, Burckhardt, Spaventa, Dilthey and GentileDie Kultur der Renaissance in Italien represents the period as a sudden emergence of genius in the middle of a cultural and artistic desert. Isolation of the Renaissance (no sense of historical continuity)

  • Imitation of Classical ModelsOpinion expressed by the artists of the time. The Renaissance has its origin when the glorious minds that sprang from the soil of Tuscany . . . (turn to the ancient ruins of Rome and start) distinguishing very clearly the good from the bad and forsaking the old styles, they began once more to imitate, to the limit of their energies and abilities, the styles affected by the ancients . . . Giorgio Vasari

    Belief that the ancients had exercised a direct influence on the rebirth of Art and Literature was general (a direct consequence of numerous archeological excavations)

  • New Critical ApproachesThe theory of continuity applied to the Middle Ages and RenaissanceMiddle Ages: rich in variety, stimulated by many problems, interests and aspirations; a restless age, full of exuberant lifeIs the Renaissance a new phenomenon, with features of its own, or is it a broadening (not very original) of already present motifs and ideals?First step: distinguish between every-day-life and the LIFE OF THE MIND, the theoretical formulation of a CONSCIOUSNESS (mans thoughts and ideas)

  • Renaissance The term is used to describe a MOBILIZATION OF IDEAS which is primarilyARTISTICLITERARYCULTURAL The Renaissance as an INTELLECTUAL reality, not as a PHYSICAL oneAn intellectual construction in which human designs and actions conform to an ideal system, to a spiritual creed, to a program of lifeOnly when transformed in a complete, theoretical affirmation, a practical truth becomes a theoretical precept, a law explicitly credited with a universal validity

  • Vix scio quae fuerim, vix Roma recordor; vix sinit occasus vel neminisse mei. Par tibi, Roma, nihil cum sos prope tota ruina. Hildebrand de Lavardin (Le Mans, 1106)Nichil actum fore potavi, si que legendo didiceram, non aggrederer exercendo. Cola di Rienzo (1350)Nos . . . Volentes et desiderantes . . . Voluntates, benignitates, et liberalitates antiquorum romanorum principium . . . imitari. Decree of the sovereignity of the Roman People I August 1347 Imitatio - legere becomes exercere. Instead of an elegy, there is a determination to revive the ancient splendors and glories of RomeMen must imitate the ancients in matters calling for strength and vigor . . . (they must adopt) the true and perfect ways of antiquity, not the false and corrupt. Niccol Machiavelli (Larte della guerra)

  • Limitation of Medieval thought a) the relationship between God and man; b) the Christian and Augustinian sense of sin and grace (religious conception of the world) The Classic authors remained ornaments in the works of the Middle Ages, intended to give luster to the moral and spiritual ways of the medieval philosophers (Dante?)

    Il est remarquable . . . que pendant la priode la plus radieuse de la Renaissance les types iconographiques transmis et donc altrs, - soient presque partout abandonns au profit des types retrouvs dans leur puret premire. J. Seznec, La survivance des dieux antiques

  • For the Medieval scholar, Rome was imitable, but only as Christian Rome, capital of Christianity

    The Renaissance viewed Rome as the ideal moment in human history, in which the highest aspirations of mankind were realized. Imitation becomes a pattern of life

  • Realism and Individualism In the Middle Ages realism is episodic, emotional. The detail is realistic, but the general conception is not. The Prime Mover of life and human history is located outside the world and the destinies of men are determined by the will of God. The sensibility is human and mundane, but the spirit is nourished by an inner life located outside carnal humanityMedieval and Renaissance historical descriptions? What is the difference? (177)The conceptual (vs impressionistic)realism of Guicciardini and Machiavelli

  • The realistic description of physical traits is undertaken only if it serves to complete the moral description (178)Renaissance RealismVillanis (medieval chronicler) Historiae Fiorentine a) passionate moral appeals (God, devil etc.). b) no interpretation, no sense of human individualityMachiavellis Historiae Fiorentine a) no supernatural presence b) man is the primary agent of history c) the supernatural as fatality, casualty d) natural deterministic realism (sins are political not moral)

  • Machiavellis political realism is not concerned with right and wrong, good and evil

    But since it is my purpose to write what may be useful to those who need it, I have thought it more fitting to concern myself with the effective reality of things than with speculation. For many have imagined republics (Plato) and principates which have never been seen or known to exist in reality. Machiavelli Il principe

    Political realism: How things are, not how things should be

    No supernatural Will to explain the immediate causes of events

  • Art in the RenaissanceAim of the medieval artist is the glorification of the Creator (Theophilus, Schedula diversarum artium)Renaissance artist (L. B. Alberti, Della pittura) a) is conscious of the intrinsic merit of an artwork b) aims at creating the beautiful and immortal c) glorification of humanity and its achievements d) Nature is imitated (scientifically) per se, not as a mirror of Gods powerLiberation of the artist from every restriction that is not dictated by artistic reasonThe world becomes a synthesis of lines, volumes and colors

  • Novelty of the RenaissanceRealism and individualism (from Alberti to Machiavelli, Ariosto and Galileo) lead to the affirmation of the complete autonomy of art, politics, science and history

    Ars gratia artis

    The typically medieval conception of the world in which no branch of human activity could be considered independent from life as a whole is abandoned

  • Man and GodMain issues raised by the new system a) how can Nature be reconciled with the excellence of man b) how to reconcile man and Nature with GodArt and politics are no longer serving a supernatural purpose but ethics still is!The idea of a purely rational ethic, independent from religion, is unthinkableEthics concern itself with the question: how things ought to be (vs. how things are)The need to justify the world and existence, nature and creature, will and fortune, brings man back to the idea of a transcendent God of humanity

  • The Treatise as GenreA treatise is a prose work that analyzes a problem in all its aspects. It is the demonstration of a thesis whose validity results from the confutation of all other antithesesThe themes can range from politics, to aesthetics, to scienceIt derives directly from the Greek and Roman tradition, from Platos Dialogues, where a group of thinkers that debate their individual philosophical positionsThe treatise can have a dialogical form, that becomes a lively debate, or can be discursive, presenting different arguments and contrasting perspectivesPopularity of the treatise a) the rediscovery of the classics b) exemplary form of discussion and expression of ideas c) the necessity to theorize and form a new model of man d) the projection on the page of a human res publica whose aim is the education of free thinking human beings

  • Niccol Machiavelli1469 Born in Florence1498 Is elected secretary of the Florentine Republic1500 Is sent as envoy to the King of France, Louis XII1501 Marries Marietta Corsini; will have six children1502 Envoy to Cesare Borgia, at Urbino and Imola1503 Is sent to Rome for the Conclave (Pious III)1506 Works for the republic and organizes its army1507-11 Travels to Tyrol (Maximilian), then to Blois, to meet Louis XII. Later he travels to Munich and France1512 The Holy League of Modena decides the return of the Medici to Florence. He is banned from the city for a year1513 Imprisoned and tortured. Begins to write The Prince1515-16 Offers The Prince to Lorenzo de Medici1519 Composes The Art of War1525 Completes the eight volumes of the Florentine Chronicles1527 After the sack of Rome, Florence returns to the Republic. He dies on June 21

  • The Prince and Its IdeologyA negative evaluation of human natureThe conviction of human natures immutabilityThe necessity to keep these data in mind if one wants to enter a political career (Realpolitik)The usefulness of examples taken from the pastAt the light of his lucid realism, politica activity becomes a science whose core is the foundation and maintenance of the statePolitical actions shall not be evaluated on the basis of a moral code but keeping in mind the principle of utility and congruence with that given objective (previous point)Virtues are therefore: cruelty, dissimulation, murder etc.Net separation between moral and political judgement differentiates The Prince from previous treatises (mirror of prince) popular during the Middle Ages (catalogues of moral virtues)Contrasting aspects of Machiavellis thought: a) the theorization of an absolute power (The prince) b) his sympathy for the democratic government (The Discourses)

  • The Structure of The Prince

    Chapters I - XI

    Typology of Principalities and problems related to each of them

    Chapters XII - XIV

    Mercenary and volunteer militias

    Chapters XV - XIX

    Virtues and attitudes of a Prince

    Chapters XX - XXIII

    Precepts of various kind

    Chapter XXIV

    Responsibilities of Italian Princes

    Chapter XXV

    Virtue and Fortune

    Chapter XXVI

    Exhortation to liberate Italy

  • XI Ecclesiastical Principalities a) Reasons why Ecclesiastical Principalities are secure and happy b) Why are E.P. so powerful now when they once were not c) Present history: Alexander VI - Julius II - Leo XXII Militia and Mercenary Soldiers a) Chief foundations of a state b) Different kinds of arms c) Mercenaries (proof of reality) d) What kind of sins have the Italian princes committed e) Overview of the Quattrocento (church and princes) XIII Auxiliary and Native Troops a) Definition b) Why are they worse than mercenaries c) The symbolic meaning of Davids biblical story d) But men with their lack of prudence initiate novelties and, finding the first taste good, do not notice the poison within.

  • XIV The Duties of a Prince in Regard to the Militia a) Main objective of a Prince b) Armed vs unarmed c) The art of war in peace time d) Knowledge of hardship and territory e) Imitation and studyXV Of the Things for which Men, especially Princes, are Praised or Blamed a) Concept of reality b) What ought to be done (consequences) c) Know hows for a Prince d) Good and bad virtues (reversed value)XVI Of Liberality and Niggardliness a) Praise of the miserly Prince (good vice) XVII Of Cruelty and Clemency a) Reasons for being cruel (consequences of leniency) b) To be feared or loved

  • c) Description of humanity d) Hannibals example and the historians e) Men love of their own free will but fear at the will of the prince.XVIII In What Way Must Princes Keep Faith a) Experience contradicts good intentions b) The beast and the man c) Broken promises d) Deceivers and deceived e) Alexander VIs example f) It is not, therefore, necessary for a prince to have all the above-named qualities, but it is necessary to seem to have them. g) To be or to appear to be h) Mercy, faith, integrity, humanity, religion

  • Machiavelli and FortunaFortuna as ambiguous concept in M.?Characteristics of Fortuna (images used)What is the role of religion in a state (religio instrumentum regni)What is virtue for Machiavelli? Are mans virtue, intelligence, energy enough to create and shape history?Can man achieve anything by himself?Where is God in his philosophy of man